A Retirement Community Where Hollywood Takes Care Of Its OwnThe Motion Picture and Television Fund is home to 200-plus residents who once worked on screen, behind cameras and in production rooms and secretarial pools.

Connie Sawyer, 103, got into show business when she was 8. She's lived on the Motion Picture and Television Fund campus since 2004.
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Connie Sawyer, 103, got into show business when she was 8. She's lived on the Motion Picture and Television Fund campus since 2004.

Daniel Hajek /NPR

You don't expect a bunch of 80-pluses to be working up a sweat, but at the Motion Picture and Television Fund gym, they do. An exercise instructor encourages them. "Squeeze your tush. ... Tushies, tushes, tushies. Squeeze your buns," she urges.

At this retirement community in Woodland Hills, Calif., less than an hour from Los Angeles, the movie and TV industry has been taking care of its own for decades. The Motion Picture and Television Fund's 48 acres include gardens, fountains, cottages and apartments for independent residents, plus assisted living facilities with skilled nurses and dementia care.

The Motion Picture and Television Fund's 48 acres include gardens, fountains, assisted living facilities and homes for independent residents.
Courtesy of the Motion Picture and Television Fund
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Courtesy of the Motion Picture and Television Fund

The Motion Picture and Television Fund's 48 acres include gardens, fountains, assisted living facilities and homes for independent residents.

Courtesy of the Motion Picture and Television Fund

Resident Connie Sawyer, 103, has lived here since 2004. She got into show business when she was 8. "I worked in vaudeville and nightclubs. I played every saloon in the business," she says. She was in a Broadway show called A Hole in the Head, which caught the attention of one of Frank Sinatra's managers. Sawyer says the manager told Sinatra, " 'You gotta buy that property. It'll make a wonderful movie.' He said, 'Buy it! Bring the author.' " But the author wouldn't go without Sawyer, who created her stage character — a funny, tipsy gal who got lots of laughs. So the manager called Sinatra back and, according to Sawyer, "He said, 'Bring the drunk!' "

Today, Sawyer is still working — she did a Super Bowl ad for Dodge last year. She says the secret of her longevity is "Move. Don't sit on the couch. All my life, I played golf, I swam. And even here, I go to the exercise class."

Sawyer takes special swim classes for her arthritis in a pool Jodie Foster contributed to the campus. (Water therapy helped the actress' mother, and she wanted to help others.) The community also offers a weekly writing workshop called the Gray Quill Society. At the group's 115th meeting, somebody's Labrador snoozes while screenwriter Peter Dunne, a volunteer, runs the show. Fourteen residents sit around a long table with manuscripts they're working on — memoirs, poems, even promos they may record at the home's 24/7 closed circuit TV station. That same station also airs resident-made short films and recorded talks.

Water therapy helped Jodie Foster's mother, so the actress contributed a pool to the Woodland Hills campus.
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Water therapy helped Jodie Foster's mother, so the actress contributed a pool to the Woodland Hills campus.

Courtesy of the Motion Picture and Television Fund

The Motion Picture and Television Fund is home to 200-plus residents who once worked on screen, behind cameras, in production rooms and in secretarial pools — industry people in an extremely fickle industry. Fund President Bob Beitcher says most were freelancers.

"They might be working on [a] TV series that [is] supposed to be 13 episodes; six weeks into it, it gets canceled, they're out of work," he says. "They work in a feature film, feature films end and then they're out of work. So it really is an industry where you never know what lies in your future."

The founders of the fund, some of film's greatest early stars, decided to create some stability. In 1921, they formed a fund so working industry folks could make contributions to those without work.

"That was the vision of Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin, D.W. Griffith," Beitcher says. "And they say that if you worked on a Mary Pickford picture, she had a little galvanized bucket on the set with a little flag on it and if you were lucky enough to be working that day, she expected you to drop something in the bucket to reflect your gratitude for getting paid for the work."

They might be working on [a] TV series that [is] supposed to be 13 episodes; six weeks into it, it gets canceled, they're out of work. They work in a feature film, feature films end and then they're out of work.

Bob Beitcher, Motion Picture and Television Fund

All these years later, the industry still pitches in. Fund chairman and DreamWorks Animation head Jeffrey Katzenberg has raised about half a billion dollars in the past 23 years. The money supports thousands of industry people in need, including residents who can't afford the $3,000 to $8,000 monthly fee.

Ken Scherer, CEO of the Motion Picture and Television Fund foundation, says many facilities on campus are named for the film giants who endowed them, like Kirk Douglas.

"He would tour the Alzheimer's unit that he helped build, and then he would come and have dinner," Scherer says. "And inevitably a resident would walk up and say to Kirk Douglas, 'You were in my last picture.' Now that person could've been a grip [lighting and rigging technician], but in his head, Kirk Douglas worked on his picture."

Madeline Smith and Tony Lawrence met and married on the Motion Picture and Television Fund campus.
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Madeline Smith and Tony Lawrence met and married on the Motion Picture and Television Fund campus.

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Film and TV giants have also used the campus' facilities — Norma Shearer and Mary Astor lived there. Hattie McDaniel died there, and comedian Bud Abbott came in for physical therapy.

More recently, a meeting at the campus was almost movielike: TV writer Tony Lawrence, 87, moved to the campus 11 years ago with his wife, Nancy, who had Alzheimer's. They had been married 50 years when she died. "And that's why it was so astonishing and such a miracle to find ... someone like Madi in my life," he says.

Madi is Madeline Smith, 75, a former NBC administrative assistant who moved to the campus in 2014. A year later, she and Lawrence got married in the rose garden. On the couch in their small cottage, the newlyweds sit so close together you couldn't fit a piece of paper between them. This is what, in showbiz, you'd call a happy ending. Especially since neither wanted to move here.

"I thought, 'Oh no, this is a bunch of old people. I don't want to live here,' " Smith recalls

"Of course, everybody says that before they come here," Lawrence adds. But then you arrive and, as Lawrence puts it, "You find out you're one of the old people."

Correction March 14, 2016

In the audio of this story, as in a previous Web version, we incorrectly say the Motion Picture and Television Fund pays for industry health care centers throughout Los Angeles. In fact, since 2014, UCLA Health has funded and operated those centers.